P
Peter M. McEvoy
Researcher at Curtin University
Publications - 147
Citations - 8472
Peter M. McEvoy is an academic researcher from Curtin University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Social anxiety. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 133 publications receiving 6699 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter M. McEvoy include University of New South Wales & University of Western Australia.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Computer Therapy for the Anxiety and Depressive Disorders Is Effective, Acceptable and Practical Health Care: A Meta-Analysis
TL;DR: Computerized CBT for anxiety and depressive disorders, especially via the internet, has the capacity to provide effective acceptable and practical health care for those who might otherwise remain untreated.
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Computer therapy for the anxiety and depression disorders is effective, acceptable and practical health care: An updated meta-analysis
Gavin Andrews,A. Basu,Pim Cuijpers,Michelle G. Craske,Peter M. McEvoy,C.L. English,Jill M. Newby +6 more
TL;DR: The conclusions drawn in the original meta-analysis of internet-delivered CBT RCTs are supported: iCBT for the anxiety and depressive disorders is effective, acceptable and practical health care.
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To be sure, to be sure: intolerance of uncertainty mediates symptoms of various anxiety disorders and depression.
TL;DR: Mediational analyses showed that IU was a significant partial mediator between neuroticism and all symptom measures, even when controlling for symptoms of other disorders, and Sobel's test demonstrated that all hypothesized meditational pathways were associated with significant indirect effects.
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Improving Adherence and Clinical Outcomes in Self-Guided Internet Treatment for Anxiety and Depression: Randomised Controlled Trial
Nickolai Titov,Blake F. Dear,Luke Johnston,Carolyn N. Lorian,Judy Zou,Bethany M. Wootton,Jay Spence,Peter M. McEvoy,Ronald M. Rapee +8 more
TL;DR: The new self- guided course was beneficial, and automated emails facilitated outcomes, and further attention to strategies that facilitate adherence, learning, and safety will help realise the potential of self-guided interventions.
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The relationship between worry, rumination, and comorbidity: evidence for repetitive negative thinking as a transdiagnostic construct.
TL;DR: Worry and rumination-associated RNT was associated with a range of anxiety disorders and depression and with comorbidity for those with a principal depressive disorder, supporting recent evidence that RNT is a transdiagnostic process.